If your main requirement in a candidate is "electability", then why not just vote for Hillary? After all, if it's winning first and principles second...
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
If I decide to vote for someone whose views do not match mine, I am already a loser. For this reason, I will either find a candidate who I can support or abstain from voting in that race. I will not cut my choices to who I think stands the best probability of winning. If I did, I would be forced to vote for Hillary this year as she currently has the best chance of winning, with Obama being a rapidly rising second.Trainman wrote:A philosophy built upon idealism.If you want to vote for the candidate that represents your views, vote for the candidate that represents your views--whatever party or "chance of winning" that may be......
The practical use of that ideal can be viewed historically when Ross Perot was a third party candidate in 92 and 96. Because of that, this country had 8 years of Bill Clinton.
That is what strict idealism will bring.
Ideological goals are great - until the parties have chosen their candidates. Then you have to decide if you want to win, or be a loser.
It probably won't make any difference here in TX because the Republican will probably carry TX easily regardless.srothstein wrote: If I decide to vote for someone whose views do not match mine, I am already a loser. For this reason, I will either find a candidate who I can support or abstain from voting in that race.
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My personal belief right now is that the only way the Republicans can win is for Giuliani to be the candidate with either Clinton or Obama as the Democratic party.
So, I will either vote for Paul, the Libertarian candidate, an independent who I don't know yet, or abstain, depedning who is on the November ballot. Not being a party member, I do not vote in the primaries.
No, I don't assume that at all.KBCraig wrote:Frankie, you err in assuming that all independent or third party votes come from Republicans. There are millions of self-styled Democrats who are terrified of Hillary, but couldn't bring themselves to vote GOP.
Just be prepared for all of your gun rights to go out the window for the rest of our lifetimes.yerasimos wrote: I will not vote for Benito even if he does get an NRA endorsement. He has not done a single good thing for gun owners, ever, and does not deserve such an endorsement. More importantly, he does not deserve my vote, nor the vote of law-abiding gun owners here, whether in a primary or the general election.
As if Benito and his ilk will help me keep my gun rights, even if he gets an endorsement (I hope not!) and gets elected over the Hillarybeast?frankie_the_yankee wrote:Just be prepared for all of your gun rights to go out the window for the rest of our lifetimes.yerasimos wrote: I will not vote for Benito even if he does get an NRA endorsement. He has not done a single good thing for gun owners, ever, and does not deserve such an endorsement. More importantly, he does not deserve my vote, nor the vote of law-abiding gun owners here, whether in a primary or the general election.
'Cause that's what's gonna happen with a federal judiciary filled with Steven Breyer clones.
I am not interested in trying to prove something more than 100% of the time.frankie_the_yankee wrote:As I have shown (earlier in the thread), judges appointed by Democrats in recent times have ruled against our 2A rights 100% of the time. You can't get any worse than that.
If anyone thinks that judges appointed by Rudy would rule against our 2A rights more than 100% of the time, I would be interested to see that analysis.
See my post on page 1 of this thread.Frankie, I will take as a given that you have spent some time calculating the voting percentages of various judges, who appointed them, etc.
Is the man I described above worthy of your vote just because he places the letter R after his name?
I think the judges he appoints cannot be worse than what Hillary/Obama would appoint. And they just might be a little better.Do you really expect this political crossdresser (among other things!) to continue the pattern you have observed in your statistics?
McCain is more dangerous to our 1st amendment rights than any Democrat. He has actually been successful at destroying some of our rights to free political speech.frankie_the_yankee wrote: Then we can kiss our gun rights and our free speech rights goodbye.
Correct. Notice that McCain did not make my short list. Though he is pretty good on 2A issues.Liberty wrote:McCain is more dangerous to our 1st amendment rights than any Democrat. He has actually been successful at destroying some of our rights to free political speech.frankie_the_yankee wrote: Then we can kiss our gun rights and our free speech rights goodbye.